Bampton, Devon
Bampton | |
Castle Street, Bampton |
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Bampton |
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Population | 1,260 (2011 UK Census) |
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OS grid reference | SS957222 |
District | Mid Devon |
Shire county | Devon |
Region | South West |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | TIVERTON |
Postcode district | EX16 |
Dialling code | 01398 |
Police | Devon and Cornwall |
Fire | Devon and Somerset |
Ambulance | South Western |
EU Parliament | South West England |
UK Parliament | Tiverton & Honiton |
Coordinates: 50°59′23″N 3°29′10″W / 50.98974°N 3.48601°W
- For the village in Oxfordshire see Bampton, Oxfordshire
Bampton is a small town, parish and former manor in Devon, England close to the south-eastern corner of Exmoor and on the River Batherm, a tributary of the River Exe. It is about 10 km north of Tiverton. Bampton is a major part of the electoral ward of Clare and Shuttern. The ward population at the 2011 Census was 3,412.[1]
History
Pre-Norman
The history of Bampton is thought to have started with a Roman fort, but later Saxon remains are most easily seen. Some hedges conform to the Saxon furrow measure of 625 feet (the later furlong) and traces of Saxon strip farming can be seen to the north-east of the later castle. The circular churchyard is also Saxon in origin.
Norman
The 11th-century Norman Bampton Castle, built on earlier Saxon fortifications, and of which only the much reduced motte survives, was the seat of the feudal barony of Bampton.
Bampton now has nearly 100 listed buildings including the Grade 1 listed church, dedicated to Saint Michael & All Angels, whose tower dates from the 13th century. Parts of the former vicarage are said to date from the middle of the 15th century; and the Exeter Inn on the edge of the town was originally a farmhouse built in 1495. The town was caught up in the civil war between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda, when Stephen's troops took the town in 1136. The later Civil War reached Bampton in 1645, when Royalists from Tiverton Castle burnt the town, so that few buildings earlier than the 17th century survive.
Bampton Fair
The annual Bampton Fair was established by Royal Charter in 1258, confirming an earlier Charter of 1212, and is held every year on the last Thursday in October. This is a popular event, not least for its timing during the school half-term break. As well as a traditional funfair, there is a street market, often very crowded, selling novelties, and West Country produce. There was a monthly livestock market until the closure of the railway-line in 1966, and Exmoor Ponies were auctioned at Bampton Fair until 1985, when animal welfare concerns, and the sale of the site of the auction-ring, brought an end to what had been a major attraction at the Fair since the 1840s. Since 2004, farm-tackle, Exmoor ponies and other livestock have been auctioned as part of the Fair again, a little way out of town, at Luttrell Quarry.
Twin towns
Villers-Bocage, Calvados, France since 1974
Historic estates
References
- ↑ "Clare & Shuttern ward 2011". Retrieved 22 February 2015.
External links
- Media related to Bampton, Devon at Wikimedia Commons
- Bampton, Devon at DMOZ
- Bampton in the Domesday Book